Tim and Patrices Travel Blog

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Archive for April, 2009

Boquete

We caught an 8 hour bus from Panama City to the town of David and then a further hour to the small town of Boquete. It’s at 900m high so the weathers cooler. Once Boquete was a sleepy coffee growing town. Several years ago it was judged as the fourth best place to retire. It’s now full of ex-pats. Despite this it’s a nice place to spend a couple of days. Panama is not a major coffee grower internationally but what it lacks in quantity it makes up for in quality. On the local hills is grown the internationally awarded finest coffee in the world. We went on a tour and found that rather than growing in straight rows across the hillside the coffee plants are interspersed under larger trees providing shelter and birds. Our four hour tour ended with a connoisseur tasting session.

Yesterday we walked to ‘Paradise Gardens’ an animal sanctuary set up by ex-pats from….. England (where else). We had a good luck around and got up close and personal with a baby ant-eater. In the afternoon we went horse riding in the countryside as the sun-set over the lush green volcanic countryside. In a few days we will catch another bus to Costa (packet) Rica. We are in no hurry.

Columbia to Panama

17th April We took a 5 day sailing trip from Cartagena to Panama on a boat called Sacanagem. We were told to meet at the marina in Cartagena at 11 in the morning. We were 13 in number plus the Captain, Frederico. There were a number of formalities to do. We had lunch, did some shopping at a local supermarket and waited, and waited. Eventually the Port Authorities gave us permission to set sail. By now it was 18:50. As darkness fell we made our way out of the port towards a red lit buoy. We were told for the first couple of hours the sea would be rough. Our boat was 14m long so would soak up much of the movement of the waves. We left the bay in high spirits. Within thirty minutes three people had been sick. The waves tossed us up, down and rolled mercilessly for hours on end. Slight relief could be gained by lying on your back which switched off your balance sensors. We were lucky in that we had been allocated a cabin. Five of our crew mates tried to sleep on the deck and were awoken with waves crashing around them.

18th April The following morning we awoke bleary eyed in the middle of a confused Caribbean. The swell, wind and current were at odds with one another which made for a nauseous trip. Little was said in the day other than an occasional ‘excuse me’ as one by one we knelt at the back of the boat at what became known as ‘the altar’, to puke. Patrice made sure everyone knew that she had not been sick despite others doing so five times. Thankfully with a sail we were making around 6 knots and were told the sail time to the San Blas islands would be around 30 hours rather than the average 36. The day passed slowly. Some saw dolphins playing around the boat, others groaned below deck. Darkness again fell. We had a late dinner and went to bed.

19th April At 2am we were awoken by Captain Frederico. All hands were needed to navigate past a reef into the bay. Some were on reef lookout while I was depth monitor using the sonar equipment. We were cheered by other boats in the bay as together we accomplished the impossible, a bay entry at night. The still waters of the bay was such a welcome relief and we all slept well. Morning came and we saw we were surrounded by 5 beautiful palm tree islands with white sandy beaches. We all soon jumped in the water and explored using snorkels.With her bottom facing skywards for much of the day Patrice got an impressive ‘snorkel bum’ sun burn. Towards the end of the afternoon we met on the nearest beach and collected wood. In the evening we had a beach BBQ and were introduced to the Dutch game of Vampire!!!!

20th April We awoke, tired from the previous evening. Patrice had an impressive sunburnt bottom from snorkelling. We had breakfast and set sail for Checheme which took around three hours. Upon arrival we had lunch and most of the passengers jumped ship for some more snorkelling. In the evening Frederico offered to make another beach fire. Most were tired and unenthusiastic. We all went to bed by 10pm.

21st April After an early morning snorkel we again set sail. This time only an hour away was the small village Carti. We anchored and wandered the village for an hour or so. I wasn’t that impressed. In the evening we drank much and had a boat party.

22nd April An early start and a quick boat ride to the mainland 10 minutes away. Our trip was over. A well recommended trip.

Cruise




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Well we are booked. We met our Captain today and he seems very nice. It will take 36 hours to get to the San Blas Islands and after a few days of looking around them we continue to Panama. We leave tomorrow.

Cartagena




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We made it back to Cartagena. It’s hot here, hot and humid. Tonight we meet our Captain for the trip to Panama. Today we went to the Inquesision museum. It was a purpose built torture building where 700 people who wouldn’t tow the Catholic party line were killed. It was all in Spanish so we got a guide. Now if I were in a torture room key words would be, sombre, understanding, consideration, awe. The guides key words were entertainment, ‘have a go’, laugh. I felt a little uncomfortable being strapped into a genuine rack – but it was all good fun – apparently.
If you thought Oz was the emerald city think again, it’s Cartagena. There are 14 emerald shops and each must offer a load of commision to anyone that can get a tourist to part with their money. It’s hard not to take a good photo. Everywhere is photogenic.
Hopefully we leave on the 17th providing we are comfortable with the charter.

Cartagena




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We made it back to Cartagena. It’s hot here, hot and humid. Tonight we meet our Captain for the trip to Panama. Today we went to the Inquesision museum. It was a purpose built torture building where 700 people who wouldn’t tow the Catholic party line were killed. It was all in Spanish so we got a guide. Now if I were in a torture room key words would be, sombre, understanding, consideration, awe. The guides key words were entertainment, ‘have a go’, laugh. I felt a little uncomfortable being strapped into a genuine rack – but it was all good fun – apparently.
If you thought Oz was the emerald city think again, it’s Cartagena. There are 14 emerald shops and each must offer a load of commision to anyone that can get a tourist to part with their money. It’s hard not to take a good photo. Everywhere is photogenic.
Hopefully we leave on the 17th providing we are comfortable with the charter.

Taganga

We flew to Cartagena three days ago. the difference in temperature, culture and people couldn’t be more different. It’s much hotter, much slower paced, theAfro-Caribean influence is very visible and it;s a completely different country. We stayed overnight and saw that the city had at least two or three days of exploring to do. However each accommodation we visited were warning that they were about to increase their prices dramatically for Easter. We decided to try and beat the crowds and head up coast to the ’small fishing village’ of Taganga. Four and a half hours on a bus later we arrived.

Normally, the locals tell us, there are about 50 people on the beach. This weekend there are around three thousand. It is busy.

We have found a great dive centre (www.aquantisdivecenter) which offers Scuba dives at around sixteen pounds ago. We were also very fortunate to find the last available room at a great bed and breakfast (www.micasaholanda.com).

The place is heaving with locals on their Easter break. Gringos are fewer in number which gives the place an authentic feel. It’s nice to escape the crowds though for the quiet on the Caribean and go diving. I’ve done four dives now. It’s good to get back into it. Patrice plans to conquer her fears and do a night dive on Sunday. I’ll let you know how we get on.

Quito

Another eight hours from the jungle and we are in Quito. The change in altitude was interesting not the way up, tropical jungle through to scenery which looked more like Scotland. We found a nice cheap place to stay and tried to get flights booked to Columbia. British credit cards were not accepted on their web-site so yesterday we went to the airport to get tickets.

Tomorrow we fly to Cartagena on the Caribbean coast. This means we skip most of Columbia. From here we home to catch one of the several small yachts which go to Panama avoiding the very dodgy Darian gap area between the two countries. We have only 32 days to go now and a lot of miles to cover. Thankfully central America is much smaller in comparison to the miles we have covered. Today was spent forward planning from Cartagena and back route planning from Mexico. We will leave a couple of days as an emergency buffer.

We are both looking forward to returning home now, to catch up with friends, family and to start our ambitious new Eco-bach project.

Cuyabeno Jungle Reserve

We survived! We have just been on a fantastic five day jungle trip. Now I don’t know if it is me getting old but there were several times on the trip that I stopped and wondered if it was just me in the group of 14 people that ever paused to think about the consequences of what we were doing. Driving down the river the guide and his uncanny spotting skills saw an Anaconda (bloody big nasty snake). Without further ado the motor boat took a sharp right into the tangled undergrowth at the side of the river. As we were at the front of the boat we saw the back metre or so of something longer slithering into the water. ‘Do you want me to get it?’ asked the guide and without waiting for a response jumped into the metre deep tangled roots and grabbed the arse end of a quickly fleeing jungle killer. ‘It’s strong!’ he cried as he made Steve Erwin look like Mary Poppins. ‘Can I have some help?’…… There was a long pause as I looked back at the other people in the boat, all were younger. ‘I can’t see any volunteers,’ I replied. Now is it just me? One metre deep water, Anaconda – pissed off – front end whereabouts unknown. Volunteers !!!! To their credit two volunteers emerged and jumped off the boat. Along with the boat driver four grown men couldn’t pull the snake from it’s root ball lair. We left and I felt a little inadequate. We went on a jungle walk – at night – in the dark – with torches. We were told not to touch anything. Really? The path in places was narrow and we had to climb over trees and under branches. Leaves brushed past us. ‘That little fella one foot to your left? That’s a Wolf Spider. Oh the other one? That’s a Tarantula.’ Again why was I the only one with brown underpants? The following morning was more sedate. We went fishing…… for Piranhas ! Small chunks of beef were quickly pulled from around our fishing hooks. If we fell in? We would be OK as long as we didn’t have any cuts. Later as we were pulling into the lodge jetty we spotted a 4 metre long Cayman it’s primeval eyes set on top of it’s floating log like head. Our accommodation? Wooden rooms on stilts, open on two sides. But with a good mosquito net. Like that’s going to stop anything! One couple were awoken at four in the morning and swore blind there was something big scratching itself against one of the stilts. We had three or four opportunities to jump out of the boat and go for a swim. Anaconda, Piranha, Cayman – same water course but in the middle of a lake and a good 100 metres from where they hang out. Oh, that’s OK then. We all left the boat for a dip. Again is it me? Last night and we could choose what to do. Lets go swimming then go for a night walk then Caymen spotting by lamplight in the boat. Oh goody!What ever happened to a cold beer and a game of cards in the lodge? Sarcasm aside it was a great trip and one of the highlights of the tour. I even managed to keep a lid on my fear of spiders, snakes and bugs as big as your hand – well almost. We went with Rainforestur.com and stayed at cabanasjamu.com